CAMERON, Mo. — The Cameron R-1 Board of Education voted to terminate middle school teacher Rachel Barlow during a closed session meeting on November 26, following her appeal hearing held November 13.
During the public appeal hearing, two primary issues emerged from sworn testimony: Barlow’s admission that she used the phrase “anal beads” in conversation with a high school student, and what district administrators characterized as her refusal to comply with an administrative directive to write a statement about the incident. However, the board’s actual reasoning for the termination decision remains unknown, as their deliberations and vote occurred in closed session as required by law for personnel matters.
While we cannot know what the board discussed in closed session, the competing accounts presented at the public hearing suggest they faced a fundamental credibility determination: who to believe when the principal’s testimony conflicted with Barlow’s.
The principal testified that Barlow began writing a statement but crumpled up the paper and refused to complete it. Barlow testified that she requested the opportunity to speak with her union representative before making a statement, but was not allowed to do so. The principal said he does not recall such a request.
What makes the board’s apparent decision to credit the administrators over Barlow particularly noteworthy is testimony from Superintendent Matt Robinson, who stated under oath that Barlow had never been a disciplinary issue prior to this incident. If Barlow had a clean disciplinary record and no history of insubordination, why did the board apparently find the principal’s account more credible than hers?
During the appeal hearing, the majority of Barlow’s defense focused on alleged policy violations by other district staff members who retained their positions—violations that testimony suggested were far more serious, frequent, and even sexually explicit than Barlow’s single comment about “anal beads.”
However, testimony was carefully controlled under Missouri Sunshine Law requirements to protect employee privacy. Witnesses were not permitted to name other employees or students involved in these comparative examples, making it difficult to establish the full pattern of disparate treatment.
Because the board’s deliberations and vote occurred in closed session as required by law, it remains unclear what weight, if any, these examples of allegedly worse conduct carried in the final decision. The outcome suggests the board either did not find these comparisons credible, or determined that staff retention for more serious violations should not prevent termination in Barlow’s case.
The termination of a tenured teacher who, according to her testimony, requested to speak with a union representative before making a statement about conduct that could lead to discipline could create legal exposure for the district on several fronts:
Union Representation Rights: If Barlow can demonstrate she requested union representation before being questioned about conduct that could lead to discipline, and that request was denied, this could potentially violate her rights under Missouri’s public sector collective bargaining laws. While Missouri teachers have constitutional rights to collective bargaining under the Missouri Constitution (Article I, Section 29) as confirmed by the Missouri Supreme Court in Independence NEA vs. Independence School District (2007), the specific question of whether principles similar to Weingarten rights—which guarantee union representation during investigatory interviews in the private sector—apply to Missouri public school employees remains legally uncertain. Nevertheless, denial of a union member’s request for representation during a disciplinary investigation could form the basis of a legal challenge.
Disparate Treatment: If Barlow can establish that other employees who violated policies or directives were treated more leniently, she may have grounds for a discrimination or disparate treatment claim.
Due Process: Depending on the specific circumstances and her tenure status, questions could arise about whether she received adequate due process before termination.
Whether Barlow will pursue such action remains to be seen.
This termination decision exemplifies a troubling pattern in Cameron R-1 Board of Education decision-making over the past few years—a pattern that has created a genuine crisis of confidence in the board’s judgment.
The board faced a credibility dispute with no objective evidence: the principal says Barlow never asked for union representation; Barlow says she did. There is no proof either way. In such circumstances, why didn’t the board choose the safer option that would avoid risking a lawsuit for wrongful termination—reinstating Barlow with a strong reprimand on her employee record?
The middle ground would have:
Instead, the board chose the path of maximum risk. They chose to credit the administrators’ account despite Barlow’s clean disciplinary record and the superintendent’s testimony about her unblemished history. They chose termination despite testimony about staff retention for allegedly more serious conduct.
And critically: the board won’t be using their personal money to defend this decision if Barlow sues. They will be using taxpayer money.
This is the fundamental problem with the current board’s pattern of decision-making. When faced with difficult choices that could expose the district to legal liability, they consistently choose the aggressive path rather than the prudent one. The community is left to wonder: are these decisions truly in “the best interests of our students” as the district’s statement claims, or are they driven by other factors we cannot see from outside the closed session doors?
Taxpayers deserve a board that weighs legal risks carefully and chooses paths that protect both students and the public treasury. Instead, we have a board whose pattern of controversial decisions over the past few years has created widespread concern about their judgment and priorities.
The Barlow termination is not an isolated incident—it’s the latest example of a board that appears unwilling or unable to take the cautious, fiscally responsible approach when faced with credibility disputes and potential legal exposure.
Editor’s Note: This article is based on public testimony from the November 13 appeal hearing. The board’s deliberations on November 26 were conducted in closed session as required by Missouri law for personnel matters.
In the video below is a bit of a reading from the Dave Pelzer autobiography, A Child Called IT. This book is made available in the Cameron R-1 school district to children as early as the 6th grade. We also read from the review of this book by a current high school ELA teacher who refers to it as “horrific and terrifying.“
No restrictions of any kind are placed on this book by the Cameron school district. The district does not require parental approval for their children to read this book. Call me old fashioned, but the school district should REQUIRE the express permission of parents before they give them books to read that contain content like this.